Massachusetts quarterback Ross Comis (2) runs upfield past Mississippi State defenders with the help of offensive lineman Jack Driscoll (58, left) during the first half of an NCAA college football game in Starkville, Miss., Saturday, Nov. 4, 2017.

AUBURN – One of Auburn’s graduate transfer targets will reportedly make a decision on his stop within 24 hours.

According to a report from AuburnSports.com, University of Massachusetts graduate transfer offensive lineman Jack Driscoll says he’ll inform the coaches of his three finalists Wednesday on whether he’ll next attend Auburn, UCLA or Southern California.

Driscoll, a native of Madison, Connecticut, has already attended all three campuses on official visits including a visit to Auburn this past weekend. Driscoll, a 6-foot-5 and 294-pound lineman, started 12 games last season at right tackle and started at right guard in the 2016 season. The 2017 Eastern College Athletics Conference second-team selection was instrumental in helping Massachusetts football rank 17th across FBS in passing offense per game (297.5) while, individually, starting quarterback Andrew Ford ranked in the top 25 nationally for passing efficiency and passing yards per game.

Driscoll would be expected to make an immediate impact on Auburn’s offensive line depth that returning only three players (LT Prince Tega Wanogho, LG Marquel Harrell and RG Mike Horton) with starting experience from the 2017 season. Austin Troxell, who was a four-star prospect out of Madison Academy in the 2017 recruiting class, is battling with Calvin Ashley, a more-coveted five star member of that signing class, for the open spot at right tackle. Driscoll, who is immediately eligible but has two years of eligibility remaining, could either be asked to stabilize the right tackle position or be another experience swing tackle for either side of the line or at guard.

“Austin’s got a really good skill set. He was one of the guys that did go with the ones and twos, and like I said, (offensive line coach) J.B. (Grimes) had a plan,” Auburn head coach Gus Malzahn said during the spring season.

Auburn has had success in the transfer market with offensive linemen as Ole Miss transfer Austin Golson ended his college career playing every offensive line position before he finished his eligibility this past season. Casey Dunn, a two-time All-America selection at Jacksonville State, was able to be plugged in at center when starting center Golson needed to move to left tackle to replace a struggling Wanogho before the end of the first month of the 2017 season.

“He’s whatever’s best for the team,” Malzahn said about Golson, a Prattville High graduate who is expecting to either hear his name called in the 2018 NFL draft or be a preferred free agent invite to camp. “To ask an offensive lineman in our league to play four different positions is really unheard of, and he’s played at a high level.”